lumiera_/src/lib/format-string.cpp

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/*
FormatString - string template formatting based on boost::format
Copyright (C) Lumiera.org
2011, Hermann Vosseler <Ichthyostega@web.de>
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of
the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
* *****************************************************/
/** @file format-string.cpp
** Implementation for printf-style formatting, based on boost::format.
** This file holds the generic implementation of our format frontend,
** which actually just invokes boost::format. The corresponding header
** format-string.hpp contains some template functions and classes,
** which select an appropriate wrapper to pass the calls down.
** Here, we define explicit specialisations for the frontend to invoke,
** which in turn just pass on the given argument value to the embedded
** boost::format object, which in turn integrates the formatted result
** into an embedded string stream.
**
** To avoid exposing boost::format in the frontend header, we use an
** opaque buffer of appropriate size to piggyback the formatter object.
** @warning unfortunately this requires a hard coded buffer size constant
** in the front-end, which we define there manually, based on
** the current implementation layout found in the boost libraries.
** If Boost eventually changes the implementation, the assertion
** in our constructor will trigger.
**
** @see FormatString_test
**
*/
#include "lib/error.hpp"
#include "lib/format-util.hpp"
#include "lib/format-string.hpp"
#include <boost/static_assert.hpp>
#include <boost/format.hpp>
#include <iostream>
namespace util {
using boost::format;
namespace { // implementation details...
inline boost::format&
accessImpl (char* buffer)
{
return reinterpret_cast<boost::format&> (*buffer);
}
/** in case the formatting of a (primitive) value fails,
* we try to use a error indicator instead
*/
inline void
pushFailsafeReplacement (char* formatter, const char* errorMsg =NULL)
try {
string placeholder("<Error");
if (errorMsg){
placeholder += ": ";
placeholder += errorMsg;
}
placeholder += ">";
accessImpl(formatter) % placeholder;
}
ERROR_LOG_AND_IGNORE (progress, "Supplying placeholder for problematic format parameter")
inline void
suppressInsufficientArgumentErrors (char* formatter)
{
using namespace boost::io;
accessImpl(formatter).exceptions (all_error_bits ^ too_few_args_bit);
}
}//(End) implementation details
/** */
_Fmt::_Fmt (string formatString)
{
BOOST_STATIC_ASSERT (sizeof(boost::format) <= FORMATTER_SIZE);
new(formatter_) boost::format(formatString);
suppressInsufficientArgumentErrors (formatter_);
}
_Fmt::~_Fmt ()
{
accessImpl(formatter_).~format();
}
/** @internal access points for the frontend,
* allowing to push a parameter value down into the implementation
* for the actual formatting.
* @note we need to generate instantiations of this template function
* explicitly for all basic types to be supported for direct handling,
* otherwise we'll get linker errors. Lumiera uses the ``inclusion model''
* for template instantiation, which means there is no compiler magic
* involved and a template function either needs to be \em defined in
* a header or explicitly instantiated in some translation unit.
*/
template<typename VAL>
void
_Fmt::pushParameter (VAL const& val)
try {
accessImpl(formatter_) % val;
}
catch (boost::io::too_many_args& argErr)
{
WARN (progress, "Format: excess argument '%s' of type %s ignored."
, cStr(str(val))
, cStr(tyStr(val)));
}
catch (std::exception& failure)
{
WARN (progress, "Format: Parameter '%s' causes problems: %s"
, cStr(str(val))
, failure.what());
pushFailsafeReplacement (formatter_, failure.what());
}
catch (...)
{
WARN (progress, "Format: Unexpected problems accepting format parameter '%s'", cStr(str(val)));
pushFailsafeReplacement (formatter_);
}
template<typename VAL>
void
_Fmt::pushParameter (const VAL * const pVal)
{
if (pVal)
pushParameter (*pVal);
else
pushParameter (string("<null>"));
}
template<>
void
_Fmt::pushParameter (const char * const cString)
{
pushParameter (cString);
}
/* ===== explicitly supported =================== */
template void _Fmt::pushParameter(string const&);
template void _Fmt::pushParameter(char const&);
template void _Fmt::pushParameter(uchar const&);
template void _Fmt::pushParameter(int const&);
template void _Fmt::pushParameter(uint const&);
template void _Fmt::pushParameter(short const&);
template void _Fmt::pushParameter(ushort const&);
template void _Fmt::pushParameter(int64_t const&);
template void _Fmt::pushParameter(uint64_t const&);
template void _Fmt::pushParameter(float const&);
template void _Fmt::pushParameter(double const&);
template void _Fmt::pushParameter(void * const&);
template void _Fmt::pushParameter(const string * const);
template void _Fmt::pushParameter(const uchar * const);
template void _Fmt::pushParameter(const int * const);
template void _Fmt::pushParameter(const uint * const);
template void _Fmt::pushParameter(const short * const);
template void _Fmt::pushParameter(const ushort * const);
template void _Fmt::pushParameter(const int64_t * const);
template void _Fmt::pushParameter(const uint64_t * const);
template void _Fmt::pushParameter(const float * const);
template void _Fmt::pushParameter(const double * const);
/** @remarks usually the _Fmt helper is used inline
* at places where a string is expected. The '%' operator
* used to fed parameters has a higher precedence than the
* assignment or comparison operators, ensuring that all parameters
* are evaluated and formatted prior to receiving the formatted result
*/
_Fmt::operator string() const
try {
return accessImpl(formatter_).str();
}
catch (std::exception& failure)
{
WARN (progress, "Format: Failure to receive formatted result: %s", failure.what());
return "<formatting failure>";
}
catch (...)
{
WARN (progress, "Format: Unexpected problems while formatting output.");
return "<unexpected problems>";
}
/** send the formatted buffer directly to the output stream.
* @note this is more efficient than creating a string and outputting that,
* because boost::format internally uses a string-stream to generate
* the formatted representation, relying on the C++ output framework
*/
std::ostream&
operator<< (std::ostream& os, _Fmt const& fmt)
try {
return os << accessImpl(fmt.formatter_);
}
catch(std::exception& failure)
{
WARN (progress, "Format: Failure when outputting formatted result: %s", failure.what());
return os << "<formatting failure>";
}
catch(...)
{
WARN (progress, "Format: Unexpected problems while producing formatted output.");
return os << "<unexpected problems>";
}
} // namespace util